DocumentCode
3680554
Title
Flight deck information automation: A human-in-the loop in-trail procedure simulation study
Author
Emmanuel Letsu-Dake;William Rogers;Stephen D. Whitlow;Erik Nelson;Michael Dillard;Michael C. Dorneich;Rachel Dudley
Author_Institution
Human-Centered Systems, Honeywell Laboratories, Golden Valley, MN, USA
fYear
2015
Abstract
Information automation systems are generally intended to support pilot tasks and improve flightcrew awareness and decision making, but not to directly control the aircraft or its systems. As a result these systems do not include cases where automation decisions and actions directly affect the aircraft performance, flight path or systems. Next Generation Air Transportation System (NextGen) operational concepts and technologies will dramatically affect both the types and amount of information available on flight decks. Much of that information will be produced by flight deck information automation systems that collect, process, and present that information to the flightcrew. It is therefore important to understand the human factors characteristics of information automation systems and identify human factors issues specifically related to information automation. This paper presents an investigation of two information automation characteristics (functional complexity and automation visibility) using prototype oceanic In-Trail Procedures (ITP) display systems. The outcome will be used to develop and iterate recommendations for design and evaluation of information automation systems that will mitigate the identified human factors issues.
Keywords
"Automation","Complexity theory","Human factors","Aircraft","Atmospheric measurements","Particle measurements","Prototypes"
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Digital Avionics Systems Conference (DASC), 2015 IEEE/AIAA 34th
ISSN
2155-7195
Electronic_ISBN
2155-7209
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/DASC.2015.7311402
Filename
7311402
Link To Document